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  1. Barmen Today: A Contemporary Contemplative Declaration is a collaborative response to the times by seven students of the Living School of the Center for Action and Contemplation. Available in English and Spanish, Barmen Today was released in August 2018 and has 22,500 signatories. The document may be viewed at bit.ly/barmentoday.

  2. The Theological Declaration from the Synod in Barmen from May 31st, 1934, is the central thological statement of the Confessing Church under the regime of the National Socialists 1933-1945. For many Protestant churches, the Barmen Declaration remains a relevant guideline for their own confession, teaching, and resistance.

  3. Ask the Chatbot a Question. Synod of Barmen, meeting of German Protestant leaders at Barmen in the Ruhr, in May 1934, to organize Protestant opposition to the teachings of the so-called German Christians, who sought to reinterpret Christianity as an Aryan religion free from all Jewish influences. Those “German Christians” were subtly ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. The Barmen Declaration on German Protestantism was issued by German Protestant churches in 1934. It is an expression of dissent and opposition to the creation of a ‘state Protestant religion’, as was proposed by the Deutsche Kristen. (German Christians):

  5. Nov 19, 2014 · The Barmen Declaration was drafted by a group of German churchmen, theologians, and leaders in the city of Barmen in May 1934. The statement contains a number of articles and ends with six items that they called "evangelical truths." The first article declares that the impregnable foundation of the German evangelical church is the gospel of ...

  6. Theological Declaration of Barmen. Written by Karl Barth and the confessing church in Nazi Germany in response to Hitler's national church. Its central doctrines concern the sin of idolatry and the lordship of Christ. I. An Appeal to the Evangelical Congregations and Christians in Germany. 8.01 The Confessional Synod of the German Evangelical ...

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  8. Barmen Declaration. The Synod of Barmen was a meeting of German Protestant leaders at Barmen in the Ruhr, in May 1934, to organize Protestant resistance to National Socialism (Nazism). The synod was of decisive importance in the development of the German Confessing Church. Representatives came from established Lutheran, Reformed, and United ...

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